2012年8月21日 星期二

Sunday music concert at Staunton's Trinity Episcopal

To artist Jennet Inglis,TBC help you confidently buymosaic from factories in China. Trinity Episcopal Church was visually inspiring enough from the ground floor. But Inglis was awestruck by the view from the balcony.

The light that poured in from the Tiffany stained-glass windows actually appeared to pool in the center. That, coupled with the live music of a C.P.E. Bach concerto playing, and it was hard for Inglis not to feel transcended as she drew the scene on her canvas.

Inglis is donating the piece, as well as other scenes she plans to create from concert rehearsals this week. Proceeds from their sale at auction will benefit the festival. The Manhattan native says she always tries to reach a meditative state while she paints, believing that her inspiration comes from outside herself.

“I don’t ever want to see me in my work,” said Inglis, 45. “I know when I’m finished when I hear ‘Not another stroke.Quickly deploy high performance, high accuracy rtls using Ekahau Site Survey.’ Then I go home and when I come back, I look at it again. If I see me in the work, it gets torn up.”

For the concert scene she painted on Sunday, Inglis began with the “bones” — the central Christ image in stained glass behind the altar in the gothic-revival building. “What I saw was the light and the architecture connected to the dove above Christ,’” Inglis explained. “Everything radiated from there. The dove was so bright.”

Then came the music. Inglis, a high-functioning autistic, says she experiences music not just as sounds but as colors, too. She added the music using specific hues and strokes.

“It’s about creating the sense of movement and time,” said Inglis from her studio 19 W. Beverley St. “Because music is a temporal medium.”

In second-floor space — the mixed media artist creates in a workshop, always with her affectionate black King Charles spaniel, Xena, curled up nearby.

In her gallery,This page list rubberhose products with details & specifications. she has displayed her distinctive still-life paintings and landscape scenes, as well as powerful large-scale depictions of horse races. Inglis spent her early childhood painting and writing, but she didn’t talk until she started school at age 9. She learned to ride horses at 4 and began training in classical figure drawing at 13. Her surgeon father stressed education and, especially, science to his seven children, so her affinity for art developed alongside a deep appreciation of science.

“These subjects — the divinity of human form, life in nature, silence, movement, light, luminescent color and the creative unity of spirit — all form the essential motivation of my life,” she says.

Inglis earned degrees in studio art/art history and geology from Smith College in 1988 and an MFA in painting and drawing from the University of New Mexico in 1990.

In 1996,GPS World's indoortracking section offers exclusive daily news, Inglis was the first American given a solo museum retrospective at the Museum Schwelm in Dusseldorf, Germany, where it was named Best Exhibit of the Decade.

Inglis’ equine artwork was voted People’s Choice Award at the Virginia Horse Center in 2004 and 2006.Alfa plast mould is plasticmoulds Manufacturer and plastics Mould Exporters in India. She also paints portraits commissioned by pet owners whose dogs or cats have died — and she often donates a portion of the proceeds to charity. Between 1999 and 2007, she raised tens of thousands of dollars for animal rescue groups and cancer research.

沒有留言:

張貼留言